2009 Fantasy Preview: Detroit Lions

OK, so there's more to the Lions' fantasy preview than just their marquee wide receiver. It's no secret that the Lions had a dismal 2008 season, but from a fantasy perspective there were some points to be had from the worst team in NFL history.

As a new coaching staff, and the top overall draft pick, get used to the Motor City, there are certainly going to be growing pains for the players, coaches and fans. But there might be some smiles for fantasy owners.

Stafford, the Number One overall pick in this year's draft might have won the starting job over Daunte Culepper as much because Culpepper can't stay on the field (or stay effective) as he did because of his play. But there's a strong chance that the Lions won't allow the face of their future to get too beat up on another season that doesn't look like a winner.

Stafford likely won't be asked to throw the ball a ton, and will likely lose some snaps to Culpepper along the way, but as long as he has Megatron (Johnson) to catch anything near him he'll get some touchdowns.

Considerations:

The Lions really lack a number two (or three... or four...) receiver, so Johnson will be the focal point of every secondary the Lions play this year. Stafford also has a history of being a little bit of a happy-chucking throw first and ask questions later quarterback, so his touchdown-interception ratio might be near even.

Because Detroit had such a bad overall season last year, and because Chicago's Matt Forte's numbers across the board were so strong, Smith disappeared in the Lions' mess. Many people forget that, at the beginning of last year, the Lions had Rudi Johnson penciled in as their starting running back. Despite only 238 carries, Smith almost cracked 1,000 yards.

In 2009 there are a number of factors that should lead any fantasy owner to feel good about Smith as second running back. The biggest reason is his increased workload both because of his full-time starter status and Stafford's learning curve. The other huge reason the Lions will need Smith to produce is to keep safeties honest and not allow teams to single out Johnson in the passing game. Smith is an above average receiver, which could score points as well.

Considerations:

The Lions will have a rookie quarterback and two weapons, Smith and Johnson, for teams to game plan for this year. Teams might opt to load up the box and force the rookie to beat them with his arm, which could hurt Smith's yards per carry. The future looks bright for Smith, but he's going to have to earn every yard until Stafford shows he can beat people.

What's scary for opponents is Johnson, who was Detroit's only respected offensive player for most of last year, still went over 1,300 yards and had 12 touchdowns, now has a young gun quarterback to get him the ball and a running back, Smith, who will force teams to pay attention to the running game.

The Lions are going to be bad again in 2009, so Culpepper/Stafford are going to be asked to throw the ball a lot. If the ball's in the air, there's a good chance Megatron's going to catch it. He could have an incredible fantasy season in Detroit again this year.

Considerations:

Pretty much everything I said about Smith holds true here. If Johnson has a huge season it will be because a rookie quarterback is making plays and Smith avoids a sophomore slump. He's going to draw a double team every time the ball is snapped, but he did for most of last year and look at his numbers.

He might be a nice pick up for a bye week, and might become one of Stafford's best friends in the red zone over time, but as a rookie I wouldn't expect a ton of production.

Considerations:

Johnson's going to get the ball all day. Pettitgrew will be the quarterback's third option most of the time, and considering the Lions' line, whether it's Stafford or Culpepper, the quarterback might not last that long in the pocket.

Defense/Special Teams

2008 Numbers: really, really bad

2009 Projections: probably not a whole lot better than last year

Thoughts:

Maybe valuable in a league that scores for return yards?

Considerations:

They upgraded in a number of places, but they're still a bad unit. Don't waste a roster spot on the Lions' defense.

About Kurt Turner

Kurt's fantasy advice is featured on USA Today Sports, Bleacher Reports, SiriusXM and Fox Sports. He is the owner of FantasyKnuckleheads.com and has been butchering topics here for over 15 years. Follow him on Twitter

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